Health insurer to pay $9 million
LOS
ANGELES (AP) — A woman who had her medical coverage
canceled as she was undergoing treatment for breast cancer was awarded more
than $9 million Feb. 22 in a case against one of California’s largest health
insurers.
Patsy
Bates, 52, a hairdresser from Lakewood, had been left with more than $129,000
in unpaid medical bills when Health Net Inc. canceled her policy in 2004.
Arbitration
judge Sam Cianchetti ordered Health Net to repay that
amount while providing $8.4 million in punitive damages and $750,000 for
emotional distress.
“It’s
hard to imagine a situation more trying than the one Bates has had to endure,” Cianchetti wrote in his findings. “The rug was pulled out
from underneath, and that occurred at a time when she is diagnosed with breast
cancer, one of the leading causes of death for women.”
Bates,
a mother of two, said she screamed when she heard about the damage award.
“I
am elated,” she said.
Bates’
attorney William Shernoff said he wanted other
insurers to take notice of the award, which he believed was the first of its
kind.
“We
are going to stop a put to this practice,” he said.
Health
Net said it was implementing a freeze on policy cancelations that would last
until the company sets up a third-party review panel to scrutinize cases.
“Obviously
we regret the way that this has turned out, but we are intent on fixing the
processes to maintain the public trust,” Health Net spokesman David Olson said.
Bates
had previously been insured with another company but was persuaded to switch
over to a Health Net policy after an agent suggested she could save money.
She
said she had undergone surgery to remove a tumor and had received her first two
chemotherapy treatments when doctors stopped treating her because her bills
were going unpaid.
“I
was devastated, I didn’t know what was going to happen,” Bates said. “It’s boggling
that someone can do that to you.”
Bates
went on to complete her cancer treatment through a state-funded program.
Health
Net also said it would conduct a review of its practices and the way its
brokers and agents are trained.
The
award came a day after the Los Angeles city attorney sued Health Net, claiming
it illegally canceled the coverage of about 1,600 patients. City Attorney Rocky
Delgadillo also said the company illegally ran an
incentive program in which it paid bonuses to an administrator for meeting
targets of policy cancelations.
Health
Net acknowledged that such a program existed in 2002 and 2003 but was
subsequently scrapped.
In his findings, Cianchetti
wrote that “it’s hard to imagine a policy more reprehensible than tying bonuses
to encourage the recision of health insurance that
helps keep the public well and alive.”